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If you want to understand how behavior occurs, one of the best ways to gain information is to simply observe the behavior in its natural context. However, people might change their behavior in unexpected ways if they know they are being observed. How do researchers obtain accurate information when people tend to hide their natural behavior? As an example, imagine that your professor asks everyone in your class to raise their hand if they always wash their hands after using the restroom. Chances...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 21, 2025

Eye Tracking During Visually Situated Language Comprehension: Flexibility and Limitations in Uncovering Visual Context Effects
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Eye Tracking During Visually Situated Language Comprehension: Flexibility and Limitations in Uncovering Visual Context Effects

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Individual gaze predicts individual scene descriptions.

Diana Kollenda1,2, Anna-Sophia Reher3, Benjamin de Haas3,4

  • 1Experimental Psychology, Justus Liebig University, Giessen, Germany. diana.kollenda@googlemail.com.

Scientific Reports
|March 20, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Individual gaze patterns systematically influence how people describe complex scenes. These unique fixation biases predict differences in scene perception, highlighting the subjective nature of visual experience.

Keywords:
Gaze behaviourIndividual differencesPerceptual consequencesScene descriptions

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Visual perception

Background:

  • Recent studies indicate systematic differences in individual eye movements (gaze).
  • It remains unclear if these gaze biases lead to varied perceptions of the same visual scene.
  • Understanding the mechanisms behind subjective visual experience is crucial.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether individual observers provide different descriptions for identical complex scenes.
  • To determine if individual fixation patterns correlate with differences in scene descriptions.
  • To explore the role of gaze in shaping subjective scene perception.

Main Methods:

  • Participants viewed identical complex scenes.
  • Eye movements (gaze patterns) were recorded.
  • Scene descriptions were collected and analyzed for systematic differences.
  • Correlation between fixation patterns and description content was assessed.

Main Results:

  • Systematic differences in scene descriptions were observed among individual observers.
  • Observer fixation patterns significantly predicted pairwise differences in scene descriptions, particularly noun usage.
  • The tendency to fixate on text and people partially explained description variations.
  • These findings held even for images not used during training (out-of-sample images).

Conclusions:

  • Subjective scene perception is demonstrably shaped by individual gaze behavior.
  • Fixation biases are a key mechanism mediating individual differences in how scenes are perceived and described.
  • The study provides strong evidence for a link between visual attention and subjective experience.